Europe's Drive Toward Open Science
Across the continent, governments, funding bodies and universities are accelerating efforts to make research freely available. The European Commission has embedded open science principles into major programmes such as Horizon Europe, creating new expectations for researchers and institutions alike.
Core Policies and Frameworks
Plan S, launched by cOAlition S, requires immediate open access for publications funded by participating organisations. The European Open Science Cloud (EOSC) provides infrastructure for sharing data and services across borders. These initiatives aim to remove paywalls and speed up discovery.
University Responses and Institutional Change
Leading research universities have revised promotion criteria to reward open practices. Libraries now manage data repositories and support compliance. Many institutions have created dedicated open science offices that train staff and students on best practices.
Impact on Early-Career Researchers
PhD candidates and postdocs benefit from wider visibility of their work. Preprint servers and open data allow faster feedback and collaboration. However, they must also navigate new requirements for data management plans and FAIR principles.
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Challenges in Implementation
Discipline-specific differences remain. Some fields face higher costs for article processing charges, while others struggle with sensitive data sharing. Smaller institutions often lack dedicated support staff compared with large research universities.
National Examples Across Europe
The Netherlands has pioneered diamond open access models. Germany’s DEAL agreements have reshaped publisher negotiations. France’s national plan emphasises open data alongside publications. Each country adapts the European framework to local needs.
Funding and Infrastructure Developments
Horizon Europe allocates significant resources to open science projects. National funders increasingly tie grants to open practices. Shared services such as Zenodo and national repositories reduce duplication and improve preservation.
Career Implications and Skills
Researchers who embrace open methods gain competitive advantage in hiring and promotion. Skills in data management, licensing and reproducible workflows are now valued by employers in academia and industry.
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International Collaboration and Global Leadership
Europe’s coordinated approach positions it as a global leader. Partnerships with African and Latin American institutions extend open science principles beyond the continent. Joint infrastructure projects strengthen Europe’s role in international research networks.
Looking Ahead
By 2030, open science is expected to be the default mode of research across Europe. Continued investment in training, infrastructure and policy alignment will determine how smoothly the transition occurs for all stakeholders.







